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Posts Tagged ‘Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic’

(Amy King photos)

   Good luck getting to the ice machine and back in one piece with a pack of Wolves roaming the hotel hallways. (Amy King photos)

Charlotte

   Charlotte Langille (second from right), who hit the big 1-8 Saturday, checks out the birthday card her teammates made for her.

Mia

Mia (left) and Kalia Littlejohn share a sisterly moment on the ferry trip.

(Mindy Grove photo)

   Winner, winner, chicken dinner. Lindsey Roberts (24) and Co. watch as her game-winning trey hits nothing but net. (Mindy Grove photo)

The Wolves celebrate the title in the locker room. (King photo)

And still the champs! (King photo)

Change the sign on the Friday Harbor High School gym, because Coupeville owns the joint.

The Wolf varsity girls’ basketball squad has now gone 4-0 on the FHHS court over the past two seasons, winning back-to-back Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic titles.

The latest triumph came Saturday, thanks to a dagger of a buzzer-beating three-ball from Lindsey Roberts.

The only basket the sophomore hit all game, it dropped through the net and rolled away as the game’s final two seconds ticked off, silencing a partisan crowd and lifting Coupeville to a 34-31 win over the tourney hosts.

Coming a day after the Wolves manhandled Seattle Academy, the win lifts CHS to 2-1 heading into league play.

Coupeville has a busy week coming up, finally playing at home when they host 1A Olympic League rivals Chimacum Wednesday and Klahowya Friday.

The Wolves will close their longest home-stand of the season when they welcome Island rival South Whidbey to town next Saturday for a non-conference game.

Coupeville won its second straight Tip-Off Classic by living out the Glengarry Glen Ross credo — Always Be Closing.

A little flat in the early going, the Wolves fell behind against a taller team, but kept on scrapping.

“All game it was a battle in and around the key,” said CHS coach David King. “Friday Harbor had the height advantage, but Lindsey, Tiffany (Briscoe), Kailey (Kellner) and Mikayla (Elfrank) stood toe-to-toe all game with their post players.”

Trailing 15-13 headed into the halftime break, King stressed the need to get back to a team-wide effort on the offensive end of the floor.

“The first half was a lot of one-on-one play for us,” he said. “This led to poor shots and we didn’t give ourselves a chance to get offensive rebounds.

“We didn’t play good enough to be leading, but just well enough to know if we made a few changes after halftime we could regain the lead and come away with a win.”

Wanting to share the ball more, Coupeville did just that on a key play in the third.

Out on the break, Elfrank pulled the defense to herself, then fed Briscoe for a layup to give the Wolves the lead.

Coupeville also ramped up its defensive game, with aggressive play from guards Mia Littlejohn, Lauren Rose, Kalia Littlejohn and Lauren Grove driving their foes bonkers.

Friday Harbor committed three 30-second shot clock violations, with the biggest resulting in a Wolverine trey being called off, as it left the shooter’s hands after the buzzer.

Up three headed into the fourth, Coupeville was looking to pull away, but took a body blow when leading scorer Kailey Kellner was lost to a dislocated finger.

She made an ER visit while her teammates closed out the game, but is expected to be back at full power next week.

Coupeville and Friday Harbor went back-and-forth down the stretch, with Elfrank coming up huge.

She turned a steal into a crucial bucket, then fed Roberts for the game-winner.

With the game knotted at 31 and 10 seconds to play, King drew up a play for Elfrank to get the final shot on the wing.

With a defender in front of her, the Wolf junior smartly didn’t try and force a shot, but whipped a pass to Roberts, who was trailing just outside the arc.

Ball hit hands, ball left hands, ball met net, and Roberts danced away, having slipped the dagger in that killed all of Friday Harbor.

Before her injury, Kellner dropped in 12 points and snagged eight boards to pace the Wolves.

Elfrank had eight points, six rebounds and three blocks, while Mia Littlejohn knocked down five points and Roberts (3), Rose (2), Briscoe (2) and Grove (2) rounded out the scorers.

Grove and Roberts twinned again, each hauling down five boards.

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Elfrank

   Mikayla Elfrank torched Seattle Academy for 11 points, 12 rebounds, three blocks and two assists Friday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

(Amy King photo)

   The Wolves enjoy their ferry ride to Friday Harbor, where they are defending their title at the Tip-Off Classic. (Amy King photo)

Based on last year’s records, the opening game of the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic was a match-up of heavyweights.

Based on the results, however, one of those two teams might be a lot better than the other this time around.

Runnin’ and gunnin’ Friday afternoon, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad slapped Seattle Academy down hard, drilling the Cardinals 44-31.

The win, coming in a battle of schools which made it to the Sweet 16 of the 1A state tourney a year ago, lifts the Wolves to 1-1 and puts them into the title game of the Tip-Off Classic for a second straight year.

Coupeville, which is the defending champ, closes the tourney Saturday against Friday Harbor, which beat Seattle Lutheran.

The Wolves entered the tournament coming off a non-conference loss at Blaine, but the two days of practice in between games bore immediate fruit.

“We worked on some things and the players were a quick study in the two practices and came out on fire,” said CHS coach David King.

Junior point guard Mia Littlejohn was the catalyst early, knocking down six points and handing out assists by the bunches as the Wolves raced to a 19-10 lead at the first break.

Mia led the charge in the first quarter,” King said. “She dictated the pace and pushed the tempo.”

Littlejohn had some big-time help from Mikayla Elfrank, who was “aggressive from the minute she stepped on the court.”

The junior, in her first season with the Wolf hoops squad, went for seven of her team-high 11 points in the opening quarter, including swishing a baseline three-ball.

Elfrank put together a fantastic game, racking up 12 rebounds, three blocks and two assists to go with her points.

While Coupeville went a bit cold from the field in the middle two periods, racking up just 10 points combined in the second and third, its defense held Seattle Academy at bay.

Then senior gunner Kailey Kellner went off, scoring all 10 of her points in a decisive fourth quarter. Six of the points came via a pair of long-range treys.

Coupeville is putting an emphasis on getting out and running, though King admits it’s still a work in progress.

“We looked to run at every opportunity we could. They ran the lanes well and looked to feed the ball ahead,” he said. “One thing that did slow us down offensively was at times being too aggressive; that turned into errant passes and turnovers.

“We are still trying to figure this speed game out.”

King was especially happy with his team’s work on the boards, where Elfrank (12), Kellner (11) and Lindsey Roberts (10) dominated the rebounding battle.

“The team came ready to play today and our rebounding was outstanding,” he said.

Coupeville combined to haul down 48 caroms, winning the fight in the paint despite Seattle Academy boasting a very solid 6-foot-2 girl in the middle.

The Wolves excelled all across the court, with Littlejohn (7) and Kellner (5) combining for 12 assists and the team making off with 19 steals.

“Many players stuffed the stat sheet and did some good things today,” King said. “The others that may not have stuffed the stats, played their roles very well as a supporting cast.”

Elfrank (11), Kellner (10) and Mia Littlejohn (7) led the scoring attack, while Lauren Rose hit for six and Roberts and Tiffany Briscoe popped for four apiece.

Kalia Littlejohn rounded out the scoring attack with a bucket, while Kyla Briscoe snatched five rebounds and Lauren Grove had two steals.

Allison Wenzel, Charlotte Langille and Sarah Wright also floor time for a deep Wolf squad.

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Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose is back and looking for a second straight title at the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photo)

Anticipation builds.

It’s tourney time.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad hits the road Friday for an overnight trip, a team bonding experience and a chance to defend its title all at the same time.

The Wolves are returning to Friday Harbor for the 3rd annual Tip-Off Classic, an eight-team, two-day event they won last year, when they rolled Overlake 37-20 and South Whidbey 31-27.

Neither one of those foes are back, as two Seattle teams are joining Coupeville and Friday Harbor this time around.

The Wolves open play Friday at 2 PM against fellow 1A school Seattle Academy, while the hosts face off at 5:30 with Seattle Lutheran in a battle of top 2B squads.

Saturday the teams flip, with Friday’s losers squaring off at 10 AM, while the first day winners play for the tourney title at 1:30 PM.

Meridian, Overlake, Friday Harbor and Seattle Lutheran are competing on the boys side of the tourney, but, since the Wolves aren’t involved, that’s all we have to say on that.

Coupeville’s JV girls will join their varsity counterparts on the second day and play a non-tourney game against Friday Harbor.

The Tip-Off Classic, at least based on last year’s teams, is loaded, as Coupeville, Seattle Academy and Friday Harbor all advanced to state in 2015-2016.

All three were knocked out in the round of 16.

 

Capsules for the tourney:

 

Coupeville:

This season: 0-1

Last season: 16-6

Conference: 1A Olympic League

Coach: David King

Mascot: Wolves

School colors: red, white, black

WIAA classification student enrollment (grades 9-11): 227

Best finish at state tourney: 6th in 2001-2002

 

Seattle Academy:

This season: 0-0 (*plays Bear Creek Wednesday*)

Last season: 18-4

Conference: 1A Emerald City League

Coach: Joel DeBruhl

Mascot: Cardinals

School colors: black, red

Student enrollment: 323

Best finish at state tourney: Never placed

 

Friday Harbor:

This season: 0-0

Last season: 19-5

Conference: 2B/1B Northwest League

Coach: Fred Woods

Mascot: Wolverines

School colors: purple, gold

Student enrollment: 199

Best finish at state tourney: 4th in 1979-1980

 

Seattle Lutheran:

This season: 0-0

Last season: 14-10

Conference: 2B/1B SeaTac

Coach: David Bills

Mascot: Saints

School colors: white, blue

Student enrollment: 91.75

Best finish at state tourney: 7th in 1986-1987 and 1991-1992

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Makana Stone (far left) and teammates celebrate winning the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic. (Amy King photos)

   Makana Stone (far left) and teammates celebrate winning the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic. (Amy King photos)

Tiffany Briscoe (left) and Mia Littlejohn do some pre-game prep Saturday morning.

   Tiffany Briscoe (left) and a deeply excited Mia Littlejohn do some pre-game prep Saturday morning.

Lauren Grove (left) and Lindsey Roberts chow down after Friday night's win.

Lauren Grove (left) and Lindsey Roberts chow down after Friday night’s win.

Da champs.

Da champs.

“Our locker room was rockin’ after the win. Very vocal and a well deserved celebration!”

Having accomplished their weekend goal — bring home championship hardware from the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic — the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad went a little bonkers in the afterglow.

And that was fine with coach David King.

“We had a great start on Friday and an even better finish on Saturday!”

Garnering a little revenge and redemption along the way, the Wolves put together a defensive clinic Saturday, holding off arch-rival South Whidbey 31-27 to win the four-team tournament.

Friday Harbor beat Overlake 52-25 to claim third-place.

With two wins in as many days at the first in-season tourney the Wolf hoops program has attended in several years, Coupeville improved to 2-1 on the still-young season.

The title game win was a nice little bit of payback, as well.

The Wolves only loss so far came on opening night to the Falcons, when a last-second shot that would have forced overtime rimmed out.

South Whidbey came in confident, but they finished flat on the mat.

“In our pregame locker room talk, we could hear the chants and South Whidbey being very vocal in their pregame,” King said. “Our approach was to come into the game focused and get the job done that we came for.

“South Whidbey has a very good team and it’s always fun to compete against them,” he added. “We knew we had to make some adjustments from Wednesday to be able to come out on top.”

The Wolves spent some time in the morning watching video from opening night, and noticed a few things that allowed them to tweak their defense.

Then Coupeville came out on fire, yet calm and controlled.

Showing superb ball movement — a trait they displayed all weekend — the Wolves jumped out to a quick 9-1 lead.

Lauren Grove dropped back-to-back buckets to kick things off, before Kailey Kellner nailed a long trey and Makana Stone drilled a sweet jumper of her own.

Lauren has been working extremely hard on making some adjustments with her shooting,” King said. “So far, in our first two games her shot hasn’t been falling like she had hoped, but today it did.”

South Whidbey managed to get back in the game by forcing a quicker pace to the game and flustering the Wolves a bit.

While Coupeville was still clamping down on defense, the Wolves picked up a few too many fouls and the Falcons took advantage, draining 7 of 9 at the charity stripe in the first half.

The Falcons continued to make runs at CHS, but a three-ball from Mia Littlejohn and a clutch basket from Stone at the end of the third staked Coupeville to a 25-22 lead headed into the fourth.

The final quarter was a defensive war — neither team scored in the first four minutes of the fourth — with several Wolves coming through in the final moments.

Littlejohn swished a huge trey, Kellner tickled the twines for a bucket and Tiffany Briscoe dropped a pressure-packed free throw as Coupeville refused to relinquish the lead.

While the very-young Wolves struggled at times on offense, they came through when it mattered.

“We are still a work in progress on offense, still learning how to be patient and play to our tempo,” King said. “But this weekend we showed glimpses of how good we can be when we are patient.”

And when the offense wasn’t working, the defense, led by Briscoe in full-on Dennis Rodman-mode, was there to win the day.

Tiffany isn’t the tallest post player, but the desire and hard work she brings every day is second to none,” King said. “Even though she was undersized today she played tough defense and was on the floor whenever there was a loose ball near her.

“Yes, we need to score the ball to win, but without the effort from Tiffany today we probably don’t win.”

Everyone on the floor bought in on defense, with Grove and freshman Lindsey Roberts making a real impression on their coach.

Lauren is a ball hawk on defense,” King said. “Lindsey was another player that stepped up and played very good post defense.

“She is still learning how good she can be; we have even talked about her becoming a shut down defender,” he added. “This weekend she stepped up and gave the same type of effort Tiffany did in the post.

“It’s great to see players step up throughout the lineup and contribute.”

Stone paced the Wolves with a double-double, scoring 10 and snatching 10 rebounds. She also had five steals, five blocks and two assists.

Kellner (seven points, three rebounds, three steals), Littlejohn (six points, three steals), Grove (four points, six rebounds), Tiffany Briscoe (three points, six rebounds) and Roberts (one point, five rebounds) rounded out the stat sheet.

Kyla Briscoe and Lauren Rose also saw quality floor time in the championship game, while Friday’s surprise hero, Allison Wenzel, was an enthusiastic bench presence.

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Wolves (Amy King photo)

   Wolves (l to r) Mia Littlejohn, Makana Stone, Lindsey Roberts and Kailey Kellner celebrate on the bench near the end of the game. (Amy King photos)

dinner

Off to dinner after the game.

"Of course we won."

“Of course we won.”

Allison Wenzel can not be stopped.

The Coupeville High School sophomore basketball player got her first varsity floor time Friday and immediately went off, draining a three-point bomb on her way to a five-point fourth quarter explosion.

Toss in 21 more from senior sensation Makana Stone, and the Wolf duo combined to outscore Overlake by themselves in the opening game of the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic.

By the time the game was done, with Coupeville’s big three (Stone, Mia Littlejohn and Kailey Kellner) completely sitting out the fourth quarter, the Wolves had strolled to a 37-20 win to kick-off the two-day tourney.

Now 1-1 on the season, CHS will get a chance at garnering a bit of revenge and redemption Saturday.

The Wolves will play Island rival South Whidbey — which nipped Friday Harbor 33-30 — in the tourney title game at 1:30 PM.

Less than 72 hours after it fell to the Falcons by a single bucket on opening night Wednesday, Coupeville will get the rematch it was anticipating.

The Wolves will be coming in on a big high, after they took the best their private school foes could offer and never blinked.

“We came out fired up and ready to play,” said Wolf coach David King. “Led from start to finish.”

Fresh off a bus-and-boat trip to get to Friday Harbor, Coupeville clung to a narrow 11-10 lead after the first quarter.

Stone tossed in five, Littlejohn added four and Tiffany Briscoe banked in a bucket, but the Owls seemed like they would make a tight affair of things.

Then, the Wolves clamped down on defense, holding Overlake to just five points over the next two quarters.

An 11-2 run in the second, fueled by eight more from Stone, pushed the halftime lead to 22-12.

Then a decisive 8-3 surge in the third — with all of Coupeville’s points coming from its lone senior — sealed the deal.

Comfortably ahead, King went to his bench big-time in the fourth, with Kyla Briscoe, Lauren Rose, Lauren Grove and Wenzel playing the whole way.

Lindsey Roberts and Tiffany Briscoe split the remaining eight minutes, allowing the squad’s trio of captains to rest up and enjoy the view from the bench.

They may have been on the bench, but they were loud ‘n proud while they were there.

“One thing about this team, they all want each other to succeed and play well,” King said. “Makana, Mia and Kailey all were vocal and cheering on their teammates.”

Wenzel, who played in all four quarters, made the most of her time in the spotlight.

Allison stole the show in the fourth,” King said. “As the shot clock was winding down and our bench counting it down, she found herself outside the three-point line in front of our bench with the ball.

“With three seconds left on the clock, she knew she had to shoot, she squared up and banked home a three,” he added. “Our bench went CRAZY!”

Proving she wasn’t a one-hit wonder, Wenzel took a pass just below the free throw line on the side of the key on the very next possession and drained the jumper.

At that point, Overlake began to wave the white towel of surrender.

Littlejohn added five points to back up the two-headed beast of Stone and Wenzel, while Tiffany Briscoe (3), Kellner (2) and Grove (1) rounded out the scorers.

Stone snared 16 rebounds, made off with three steals and rejected three shots, while Grove (five boards), Kellner (four rebounds, three assists) and Rose (three steals, two assists) all chipped in.

Tiffany Briscoe hauled in four rebounds and pilfered three steals, while Littlejohn, Roberts and Kyla Briscoe had three rebounds apiece.

While they’re happy with any win, this one was particularly satisfying for the coaching duo of David and Amy King.

“After the South Whidbey game we talked about being more patient on offense, don’t force the ball into the middle and don’t take the first open shot,” David King said. “We practiced that very well Thursday night and came out today and moved the ball very well.

“This was probably our best game in our three-plus years of coaching varsity that we didn’t rush our offense and played at the tempo we wanted to play at,” he added. “Overall it was a complete game with each player contributing.”

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